Barrons AP Psychology 7th edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

even though the light has never been paired with the food (see Table 6.2).


Table   6.2 First-Order and Second-Order    Conditioning

First-Order Conditioning
Training: Presentation of bell + food = salivation
Acquisition: Presentation of bell = salivation
Second-Order Conditioning (After First-Order Conditioning Has Occurred)
Training: Presentation of light + bell = salivation
Acquisition: Presentation of light = salivation

Biology and Classical Conditioning


As is evident from its description, classical conditioning can be used only when one wants to pair an
involuntary, natural response with something else. Once one has identified such a US, can a subject be
taught to pair it equally easily with any CS? Not surprisingly, the answer is no. Research suggests that
animals and humans are biologically prepared to make certain connections more easily than others.
Learned taste aversions are a classic example of this phenomenon. If you ingest an unusual food or drink
and then become nauseous, you will probably develop an aversion to the food or drink. Learned taste
aversions are interesting because they can result in powerful avoidance responses on the basis of a single
pairing. In addition, the two events (eating and sickness) are probably separated by at least several hours.
Animals, including people, seem biologically prepared to associate strange tastes with feelings of
sickness. Clearly, this response is adaptive (helpful for the survival of the species), because it helps us
learn to avoid dangerous things in the future. Also interesting is how we seem to learn what, exactly, to
avoid. Taste aversions most commonly occur with strong and unusual tastes. The food, the CS, must be
salient in order for us to learn to avoid it. Salient stimuli are easily noticeable and therefore create a
more powerful conditioned response. Sometimes taste aversions are acquired without good reason. If you
were to eat some mozzarella sticks a few hours before falling ill with the stomach flu, you might develop
an aversion to that popular American appetizer even though it had nothing to do with your sickness.
John Garcia and Robert Koelling performed a famous experiment illustrating how rats more readily
learned to make certain associations than others. They used four groups of subjects in their experiment
and exposed each to a particular combination of CS and US as illustrated in Table 6.3.
The rats learned to associate noise with shock and unusual-tasting water with nausea. However, they
were unable to make the connection between noise and nausea and between unusual-tasting water and
shock. Again, learning to link loud noise with shock (for example, thunder and lightning) and unusual-
tasting water with nausea seems to be adaptive. The ease with which animals learn taste aversions is
known as the Garcia effect.

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